Diablo: The Black Road. Mel OdomЧитать онлайн книгу.
torch caught at once, burning blue and yellow because the pitch had been soaked in whale oil. Holding the torch in one hand, the big pirate started up the promontory, making the climb with ease.
Darrick threw himself at the pirate, hoping he had enough strength and speed left to make the distance. He caught the pirate knee-high with his shoulders, then slammed his face against the granite mountainside. Dazed, he felt the pirate fall back across him, and they both slid down the steep incline over the broken rock surface.
The pirate recovered first, shoving himself to his feet and pulling his sword. Light from the campfire limned his face, revealing the fear and anger etched there. He took a two-handed hold on his weapon and struck.
Darrick rolled away from the blade, almost disbelieving when the sword missed him. Still in motion, he rolled to a kneeling position, then drew his cutlass as he pushed himself to his feet. Knife in one hand and cutlass in the other, he set himself to face the pirate almost twice his size.
New agony flared through Raithen as the woman ground her teeth in his neck. He felt his own warm blood spray down his neck, and panic welled from deep inside him, hammering at the confines of his skull like a captive tiger in a minstrel show. For one frightening moment he thought a vampire had attacked him. Maybe the woman had found a way to trade her essence to one of the undead monsters that Raithen suspected Buyard Cholik hunted through the ruins of the two cities.
Mastering the cold fear that ran rampant along his spine, Raithen tried to back away. Vampires aren’t real! he told himself. I’ve never seen one.
Sensing his movement, the woman butted into him, striking his chin with the top of her head, and threw her arms around him, holding tight as a leech. Her lips and teeth searched out new places, rending his flesh.
Screaming in pain, surprised at her maneuver even though he’d been expecting her to do something, Raithen shook and twisted his right arm. The small throwing knife concealed in a cunning sheath there dropped into his waiting palm butt-first. He wrapped his fingers around the knife haft, turned his hand, and drove it into the woman’s stomach.
Her mouth opened in a strained gasp that feathered over his cheek. She released his neck and wrapped her hands around his forearm, pushing to pull the knife from her body. She shook her head in denial and stumbled back.
Grabbing the back of her head, knotting his fingers in her hair so she couldn’t just slip away from him and maybe even make it through the doorway out of the room, Raithen stepped forward and trapped the woman against the wall. She looked up at him, eyes wide with wonder as he angled the knife up and searched for her heart.
“Bastard,” she breathed. A bloody rose bloomed on her lips as her blood-misted word emerged arthritically.
Raithen held her, watching the life and understanding go out of her eyes, knowing full well what he was taking from her. His own fear returned to him in a rush as blood continued to stream down the side of his neck. He was afraid she’d been successful in biting through his jugular, which meant he would bleed to death in minutes, with no way to stop it. There were no healers on board the pirate ships in Tauruk’s Port, and all the priests were locked away for tonight or busy digging through the graves of Tauruk’s Port. Even then, there was no telling how many healers were among them.
In the next moment, the woman went limp, her dead weight pulling at the pirate captain’s arm.
Suspicious by nature, Raithen held on to the woman and his knife. She might have been faking—even with four inches of good steel in her. It was something he had done with success in the past, and taken two men’s lives in the process.
After a moment of holding the woman, Raithen knew she would never move again. Her lips remained parted, colored a little by the blood that had stopped flowing. Dull and lifeless, her eyes stared through the pirate captain. Her face held no expression.
“Damn me, woman,” Raithen whispered with genuine regret. “Had I known you had this kind of fire in you before now, our times together could have been spent much better.” He breathed in, inhaling the sweet fragrance of the perfume he’d given her from the latest spoils, then demanded that she wear to bed. He also smelled the coppery odor of blood. Both scents were intoxicating.
The door to the room broke open.
Raithen prepared for the worst, spinning and placing the corpse between himself and the doorway. He slipped the knife free of the dead woman’s flesh and held it before him.
A grizzled man stepped into the room with a crossbow in his hands. He squinted against the bright light streaming from the fireplace. “Cap’n? Cap’n Raithen?” The crossbow held steady in the man’s hands, aimed at the two bodies.
“Aim that damnfool thing away from me, Pettit,” Raithen growled. “You can never trust a crossbow to hold steady.”
The sailor pulled the crossbow off line and canted the metal-encased butt against his hip. He reached up and doffed his tricorn hat. “Begging the cap’s pardon, but I thought ye was in some fair amount of rough water there. With all that squallering a-goin’ on, I mean. Didn’t know you was up here after enjoying yerself with one of the doxies.”
“The enjoyment,” Raithen said with a forced calm because he still wanted to know how bad the wound on his neck was, “was not all mine.” He released the dead woman, and she thumped to the floor at his feet.
As captain of some of the most vicious pirates to sail the Great Sea and the Gulf of Westmarch, he had an image to maintain. If any of his crew sensed weakness, someone would try to exploit it. He’d taken his own captaincy of Barracuda at the same time he’d taken his former captain’s life.
Pettit grinned and spat into the dented bronze cuspidor in the corner of the room. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, then said, “Looks like ye’ve about had yer fill of that one. Want me to bring another one up?”
“No.” Controlling the fear and curiosity that raged within him, Raithen cleaned his bloody knife on the woman’s clothes, then crossed the room to the mirror. It was cracked and contained dark gray age spots where the silver-powder backing had worn away. “But she did remind me of something, Pettit.”
“What’s that, cap’n?”
“That damned priest, Cholik, has been thinking of us as lackeys.” Raithen peered into the mirror, surveying the wound on his neck, poking at the edges of it with his fingers. Thank the Light, it wasn’t bleeding any more than it had been, and it even appeared to be stopping.
The flesh between the bite marks was raised, swollen, and already turning purple. Bits of skin and even the meat beneath hung in tatters. It would scar, Raithen knew. The thought made him bitter because he was vain about his looks. By most accounts, he was a handsome man and had taken care to remain that way. And it would give him a more colorful and acceptable excuse about how all the bruising had taken place around his neck.
“Aye,” Pettit grunted. “Them priests, they get up under a man’s skin with them high-and-mighty ways of theirs. Always actin’ like they got a snootful of air what’s better’n the likes of ye and me. There’s been a night or two on watch when I’d think about goin’ after one of them and guttin’ him, leavin’ him out for the others to find. Might put them in a more appreciatin’ frame o’ mind about what we’re a-doin’ here.”
Satisfied that his life wasn’t in danger unless the woman was carrying some kind of disease that hadn’t become apparent yet, Raithen took a kerchief from his pocket and tied it around his neck. “That’s not a bad idea, Pettit.”
“Thank ye, cap’n. I’m always thinkin’. And, why, this here deserted city with all them stories o’ demons and the like, it’d be a perfect place to pull something like that. Why, we’d find out who the true believers were among ol’ Cholik’s bunch fer damn sure.” He grinned, revealing only a few straggling, stained teeth remaining in his mouth.
“Some of the men might get worried, too.” Raithen surveyed the kerchief around his neck in the mirror. Actually, it didn’t